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<h2> CHAPTER XLV. Peter Sees Two Terrible Feathered Hunters. </h2>
<p>While it is true that Peter Rabbit likes winter, it is also true that life
is anything but easy for him that season. In the first place he has to
travel about a great deal to get sufficient food, and that means that he
must run more risks. There isn't a minute of day or night that he is
outside of the dear Old Briar-patch when he can afford not to watch and
listen for danger. You see, at this season of the year, Reddy Fox often
finds it difficult to get a good meal. He is hungry most of the time, and
he is forever hunting for Peter Rabbit. With snow on the ground and no
leaves on the bushes and young trees, it is not easy for Peter to hide.
So, as he travels about, the thought of Reddy Fox is always in his mind.</p>
<p>But there are others whom Peter fears even more, and these wear feathers
instead of fur coats. One of these is Terror the Goshawk. Peter is not
alone in his fear of Terror. There is not one among his feathered friends
who will not shiver at the mention of Terror's name. Peter will not soon
forget the day he discovered that Terror had come down from the Far North,
and was likely to stay for the rest of the winter. Peter went hungry all
the rest of that day.</p>
<p>You see it was this way: Peter had gone over to the Green Forest very
early that morning in the hope of getting breakfast in a certain swamp. He
was hopping along, lipperty-lipperty-lip, with his thoughts chiefly on
that breakfast he hoped to get, but at the same time with ears and eyes
alert for possible danger, when a strange feeling swept over him. It was a
feeling that great danger was very near, though he saw nothing and heard
nothing to indicate it. It was just a feeling, that was all.</p>
<p>Now Peter has learned that the wise thing to do when one has such a
feeling as that is to seek safety first and investigate afterwards. At the
instant he felt that strange feeling of fear he was passing a certain big,
hollow log. Without really knowing why he did it, because, you know, he
didn't stop to do any thinking, he dived into that hollow log, and even as
he did so there was the sharp swish of great wings. Terror the Goshawk had
missed catching Peter by the fraction of a second.</p>
<p>With his heart thumping as if it were trying to pound its way through his
ribs, Peter peeped out of that hollow log. Terror had alighted on a tall
stump only a few feet away. To Peter in his fright he seemed the biggest
bird he ever had seen. Of course he wasn't. Actually he was very near the
same size as Redtail the Hawk, whom Peter knew well. He was handsome.
There was no denying the fact that he was handsome.</p>
<p>His back was bluish. His head seemed almost black. Over and behind each
eye was a white line. Underneath he was beautifully marked with wavy bars
of gray and white. On his tail were four dark bands. Yes, he was handsome.
But Peter had no thought for his beauty. He could see nothing but the
fierceness of the eyes that were fixed on the entrance to that hollow log.
Peter shivered as if with a cold chill. He knew that in Terror was no pity
or gentleness.</p>
<p>"I hope," thought Peter, "that Mr. and Mrs. Grouse are nowhere about." You
see he knew that there is no one that Terror would rather catch than a
member of the Grouse family.</p>
<p>Terror did not sit on that stump long. He knew that Peter was not likely
to come out in a hurry. Presently he flew away, and Peter suspected from
the direction in which he was headed that Terror was going over to visit
Farmer Brown's henyard. Of all the members of the Hawk family there is
none more bold than Terror the Goshawk. He would not hesitate to seize a
hen from almost beneath Farmer Brown's nose. He is well named, for the
mere suspicion that he is anywhere about strikes terror to the heart of
all the furred and feathered folks. He is so swift of wing that few can
escape him, and he has no pity, but kills for the mere love of killing. In
this respect he is like Shadow the Weasel. To kill for food is forgiven by
the little people of the Green Forest and the Green Meadows, but to kill
needlessly is unpardonable. This is why Terror the Goshawk is universally
hated and has not a single friend.</p>
<p>All that day Peter remained hidden in that hollow log. He did not dare put
foot outside until the Black Shadows began to creep through the Green
Forest. Then he knew that there was nothing more to fear from Terror the
Goshawk, for he hunts only by day. Once more Peter's thoughts were chiefly
of his stomach, for it was very, very empty.</p>
<p>But it was not intended that Peter should fill his stomach at once. He had
gone but a little way when from just ahead of him the silence of the early
evening was broken by a terrifying sound—"Whooo-hoo-hoo, whooo-hoo!"
It was so sudden and there was in it such a note of fierceness that Peter
had all he could do to keep from jumping and running for dear life. But he
knew that voice and he knew, too, that safety lay in keeping perfectly
still. So with his heart thumping madly, as when he had escaped from
Terror that morning, Peter sat as still as if he could not move.</p>
<p>It was the hunting call of Hooty the Great Horned Owl, and it had been
intended to frighten some one into jumping and running, or at least into
moving ever so little. Peter knew all about that trick of Hooty's. He knew
that in all the Green Forest there are no ears so wonderful as those of
Hooty the Owl, and that the instant he had uttered that fierce hunting
call he had strained those wonderful ears to catch the faintest sound
which some startled little sleeper of the night might make. The rustle of
a leaf would be enough to bring Hooty to the spot on his great silent
wings, and then his fierce yellow eyes, which are made for seeing in the
dusk, would find the victim.</p>
<p>So Peter sat still, fearful that the very thumping of his heart might
reach those wonderful ears. Again that terrible hunting cry rang out, and
again Peter had all he could do to keep from jumping. But he didn't jump,
and a few minutes later, as he sat staring at a certain tall, dead stub of
a tree, wondering just where Hooty was, the top of that stub seemed to
break off, and a great, broad-winged bird flew away soundlessly like a
drifting shadow. It was Hooty himself. Sitting perfectly straight on the
top of that tall, dead stub he had seemed a part of it. Peter waited some
time before he ventured to move. Finally he heard Hooty's hunting call in
a distant part of the Green Forest, and knew that it was safe for him to
once more think of his empty stomach.</p>
<p>Later in the winter while the snow still lay in the Green Forest, and the
ice still bound the Laughing Brook, Peter made a surprising discovery. He
was over in a certain lonely part of the Green Forest when he happened to
remember that near there was an old nest which had once belonged to
Redtail the Hawk. Out of idle curiosity Peter ran over for a look at that
old nest. Imagine how surprised he was when just as he came within sight
of it, he saw a great bird just settling down on it. Peter's heart jumped
right up in his throat. At least that is the way it seemed, for he
recognized Mrs. Hooty.</p>
<p>Of course Peter stopped right where he was and took the greatest care not
to move or make a sound. Presently Hooty himself appeared and perched in a
tree near at hand. Peter has seen Hooty many times before, but always as a
great, drifting shadow in the moonlight. Now he could see him clearly. As
he sat bolt upright he seemed to be of the same height as Terror the
Goshawk, but with a very much bigger body. If Peter had but known it, his
appearance of great size was largely due to the fluffy feathers in which
Hooty was clothed. Like his small cousin, Spooky the Screech Owl, Hooty
seemed to have no neck at all. He looked as if his great head was set
directly on his shoulders. From each side of his head two great tufts of
feathers stood out like ears or horns. His bill was sharply hooked. He was
dressed wholly in reddish-brown with little buff and black markings, and
on his throat was a white patch. His legs were feathered, and so were his
feet clear to the great claws.</p>
<p>But it was on the great, round, fierce, yellow eyes that Peter kept his
own eyes. He had always thought of Hooty as being able to see only in the
dusk of evening or on moonlight nights, but somehow he had a feeling that
even now in broad daylight Hooty could see perfectly well, and he was
quite right.</p>
<p>For a long time Peter sat there without moving. He dared not do anything
else. After he had recovered from his first fright he began to wonder what
Hooty and Mrs. Hooty were doing at that old nest. His curiosity was
aroused. He felt that he simply must find out. By and by Hooty flew away
very carefully, so as not to attract the attention of Mrs. Hooty. Peter
stole back the way he had come.</p>
<p>When he was far enough away to feel reasonably safe, he scampered as fast
as ever he could. He wanted to get away from that place, and he wanted to
find some one of whom he could ask questions.</p>
<p>Presently he met his cousin, Jumper the Hare, and at once in a most
excited manner told him all he had seen.</p>
<p>Jumper listened until Peter was through. "If you'll take my advice," said
he, "you'll keep away from that part of the Green Forest, Cousin Peter.
From what you tell me it is quite clear to me that the Hooties have begun
nesting."</p>
<p>"Nesting!" exclaimed Peter. "Nesting! Why, gentle Mistress Spring will not
get here for a month yet!"</p>
<p>"I said NESTING," retorted Jumper, speaking rather crossly, for you see he
did not like to have his word doubted. "Hooty the Great Horned Owl doesn't
wait for Mistress Spring. He and Mrs. Hooty believe in getting household
cares out of the way early. Along about this time of year they hunt up an
old nest of Redtail the Hawk or Blacky the Crow or Chatterer the Red
Squirrel, for they do not take the trouble to build a nest themselves.
Then Mrs. Hooty lays her eggs while there is still snow and ice. Why their
youngsters don't catch their death from cold when they hatch out is more
than I can say. But they don't. I'm sorry to hear that the Hooties have a
nest here this year. It means a bad time for a lot of little folks in
feathers and fur. I certainly shall keep away in from that part of the
Green Forest, and I advise you to."</p>
<p>Peter said that he certainly should, and then started on for the dear Old
Briar-patch to think things over. The discovery that already the nesting
season of a new year had begun turned Peter's thoughts towards the coming
of sweet Mistress Spring and the return of his many feathered friends who
had left for the far-away South so long before. A great longing to hear
the voices of Welcome Robin and Winsome Bluebird and Little Friend the
Song Sparrow swept over him, and a still greater longing for a bit of
friendly gossip with Jenny Wren. In the past year he had learned much
about his feathered neighbors, but there were still many things he wanted
to know, things which only Jenny Wren could tell him. He was only just
beginning to find out that no one knows all there is to know, especially
about the birds. And no one ever will.</p>
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